Kyeonghoon Oh uses color like a mood
When Kyeonghoon Oh picks up a pencil or brush, the first thing he draw is always a simple circle. It’s his way to calm scattered thoughts and start turning feelings into images. His paintings feel like glimpses into a dream world, filled with characters that quietly carry stories between memory and imagination. Influenced by the rhythm of life in Seoul and led by emotion, Kyeonghoon uses color like a mood—soft and nostalgic one moment, bright and hopeful the next.
Matthew Almeida
Blending a love for anime, music, and literature with a haunting yet playful visual style, Matthew Almeida creates art that explores vulnerability, memory, and transformation. With roots in early childhood drawings and a deep connection to poetic imagery, his work carries the emotional weight of personal experience.
Siyeong Chang dives into his imagination
Few capture intimacy and raw emotion quite like Siyeong Chang. Known for a delicate balance between the commercial and the artistic, Chang's work feels both spontaneous and meticulously planned, each image telling a story shaped by personal introspection and imagination. Siyeong Chang shares insights on the rhythm of the shoots, the role of imagination, and the vision of creating a team of collaborators like the Avengers of the photography world.
Ekaterina Kovalenko connects consciousness and physicality
Ekaterina Kovalenko is a Berlin-based sculptor, specializing in site-specific installations using various mediums, from ceramic to VR and online installations. Her works explore the contradictions in human physicality, sensuality, self-perception, taboo, and stigmatization. Ekaterina's work deeply explores the connection between body and consciousness, using physical appearance as a universal language to engage viewers.
Uta Bekaia in search of the superhuman essence within
Uta Bekaia is a Georgian-born multimedia artist currently based in Brooklyn and Tbilisi. His artistic practice revolves around the speculative recreation of ancestral rituals, reimagined for a Queer utopian future. Drawing inspiration from traditional crafts, Bekaia creates elaborate wearable sculptures, ceramics, tapestries, and objects, which are assembled into immersive installations, films, and live performances.
TKH exploring urbanities
Macau-born TKH (Kuok Hou Tang) is a photographer with a BA in sociology. Tang is the founder of the Macau photo collective - "Dialect". He takes on themes such as the city, time, memory and local culture and explores them through the man-made landscape, the interconnection among urbanites, landscapes and human existence versus Nature.
Yen Lan Tseng photographs aspects of the female body
Based in Taiwan, Tseng Yen Lan has been documenting girls around her since the start of her career at 19. She is fascinated by the many aspects of the female body, such as postures, colors, smells, as well as abstract atmospheres, and the emotions it brings. Her film photographs usually revolve around females and the aesthetics of young women.
Bran Sólo paints contemporary melancholy
Bran Sólo is exploring the relationship between science and art, which he regards as part of him. Meanwhile, in his Mediterranean colored paintings he is interested in the graphic study of other subjects such as masculinity within a new feminist reality and consciousness, where a man can be a man on his own terms.
Park Jungwoo embraces the shadows and beauty of ordinary moments
Park Jungwoo is a photographer who loves shadow over light, finds inspiration in punk music and observing daily life and feels drawn to the brilliant beauty of ordinary moments. It is no surprise his work is a feast of colors and shapes.
Feng Jiang recreates the 90s using desires and fantasies
Feng Jiang is a Chinese born photographer working and living in Canada. His work grows as he does like extended self-portraits that reflect desires, ideologies, fantasies and brain waves from different stages of his life. FInd out how expeirences, stimulations, and particularly the 90s reflect in his work.
Giulia Mazza bends reality in her photographs
Giulia Mazza is a photographer and visual artist based in Bologna. Her visual language delves into the confused relationship between reality and subconsciousness, paying particular attention to the perception and interpretation of identity.
Myles Loftin photographs black experience, identity, and representation
Myles Loftin is a freelance photographer exploring themes such as the black experience, identity and representation of marginalized individuals, being fully aware of the power images hold and the change they can effect.
George Kanis about his project DTS and ecstasy in his work
George Kanis talks about his nude portraits of the people of the subculture scene of Athens and his raw, brutal art style emphasising primal feelings as he proudly explores questions of gender, class and sometimes race in Greek society.
3:54 Chih Han Yang
Timeless ,boundless ,endless.It’s part of me , it’s part of you.The world with the reality.The world without the reality.
Birk Thomassen redefines intimacy and sensuality
Skin tones, textures, body parts, and abstraction can only mean Birk Thomassen. Redefining freedom, while exploring what connects us to each other and to the world, he creates fiction to realize his inner world.
AdeY photographs the human experience in choreographed nudes
If anybody can photograph skin dancing with light, it is AdeY. AdeY captures moments of vulnerability, loneliness, strength, social oppression, isolation, depression, and anything that means to be human.